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Workshop Syllabus Spring 2016
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Digital Editing and the Medieval Manuscript Roll A Graduate Workshop with Beinecke MS 410 and Osborn a14
A WORKSHOP ORGANIZED BY
ENGLISH MANUSCRIPT ROLLS 1200-1600: A COLLABORATIVE DIGITIZATION PROJECT
Welcome! Over the two days of this graduate workshop, we’ll tackle:
Ø The Paleography and Codicology of Manuscript Rolls Ø The Basics of Manuscript Transcription and Scholarly Editing Ø Introduction to the Digital Edition: Challenges and Best Practices Ø Collaborative Editing Ø Text Encoding Fundamentals: XML and the TEI Schema Ø Using Digital Editing Tools: The Graphical XML Editor oXygen
Instructor Emails and Workshop Overview
Page 2
Time Commitment
What are your obligations as a participant?
Page 3
Syllabus and Schedule
The step-by-step workshop plan.
Pages 4-5
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The creation of a digital version of a MS roll, with accompanying searchable transcription and commentary, is our energizing goal. This fast-paced course emphasizes practical input from participants as we work to build this online edition.
Training goals include the paleography and codicology of rolls, digital editing and TEI markup, the use of XML editing tools, and project-based collaboration in the digital arena.
These strands combine in the design of the workshop: participants will work closely with one another to transform newly learned skills into a concrete digital artifact, and so prepare themselves to take on future digital collaborations.
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After the workshop, each participant will complete their assigned TEI transcription task; the code will be combined, linked to the MSS images, and presented online as a working edition.
Learning in this workshop is driven by participants themselves, through their active role in the process of edition creation.
Project participants will be credited as co-editors of the final digital graduate training edition.
Workshop Philosophy: Learning through Building
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This workshop has been created and will be run by graduate students. Its participants and graduate student facilitators will work collectively to gain digital humanities skills and complete their encoding projects.
In the future, we hope that those who have participated in the course will go on to teach similar courses at their home institutions, and so keep on learning about the TEI and digital editing themselves.
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As you work through this course, take control of your role as a digital humanist. Actively seek to master the skills that you want to have. In each unit, consider especially how you would teach others the fundamentals of text encoding, digital editing, and the details of manuscript codicology.
For more information about our ongoing collaboration, or about our workshop series, please contact [email protected]
Looking to the Future: Your Role in the Collaboration
Workshop Instructors
Course Co-ordinators & Lead Instructors
Joseph Stadolnik [email protected]
Anya Adair [email protected]
Course Administrators & Co-Instructors
Alexandra Reider [email protected]
Gina Marie Hurley [email protected]
Emily Ulrich [email protected]
Katherine Hindley [email protected]
Eric Ensley [email protected]
Guest Lecturers
Catherine DeRose YALE DIGITAL HUMANITIES LAB [email protected] Raymond Clemens CURATOR, BEINECKE RARE BOOK & MANUSCRIPT LIBRARY [email protected]
Ult imately , what sets the digital humaniti es apart from many other humanit ies f ie lds is i ts methodologica l commitment to building things a s a way of knowing.
—Matthew K. Gold
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What do YOU need to do? Digital projects take thoughtful commitment: read carefully what’s required.
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BEFORE THE WORKSHOP
You will need to:
Ø Read two articles
Ø Familiarize yourself with the general content of the webpage of the TEI initiative
Ø Post responses on the class website
Ø Complete an online transcription exercise
The pre-workshop time commitment will be approximately 4 hours.
You may begin posting responses ten days before the workshop; these posts must be completed by 12pm on March 10th – the day before we begin.
DURING THE WORKSHOP
You will need to:
Ø Attend both days of the workshop, March 11-12, 2016
Ø Collaborate closely with your peers on all aspects of the project
Ø Be prepared to make editorial decisions
Ø Participate enthusiastically!
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AFTER THE WORKSHOP
You will need to:
Ø Complete your assigned encoding task in a timely fashion
Ø Submit your completed code – with commentary
Ø Reflect on your experience of the course, and provide feedback
Ø Proof-read the completed MSS encodings
The post-workshop time commitment should be no more than 6 hours (it may be much less).
Time allowances will vary depending on collective editorial decisions made during the workshop, and your own level of comfort with text encoding.
We hope that 2-3 months after the workshop, we will see the fruits of our collective labor go live on a website hosted by the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
ROLLS IN THE UK PARLIAMENTARY ARCHIVES
Image reproduced with the permission of Parliament
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Workshop Syllabus Fuller instructions will be emailed as part of the workshop materials: below is a summary of tasks.
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DATE/TIME DESCRIPTION ACTIVITIES
Before workshop: self-directed
A General Introduction: Preparation for the Workshop Topics:
1. Digital editing: why do it?
2. Text encoding: what is it?
3. Manuscript transcription 4. Your resources – get them!
Read: Set texts and websites
Do:
1. Online transcription exercise
2. Install trial version of oXygen Post: Website reflections
Day 1 – AM: SML Beinecke Classroom Lunch & PM: Linsley-Chittenden Hall 319
9.00-9.30am SML
Meeting in Sterling Memorial Library Nave
Do: Get nametag & course materials; meet participants
9.30-11.00am 90 mins Beinecke Classroom
1. Introduction to MS rolls and our two MSS
2. The (digital) editing of non-standard MS materials
3. Transcription conventions and catalogue entries
Think:
1. What makes MS rolls unique?
2. Understand the conventions of MS cataloguing and transcription
10 mins Break -
11.10am-12.30pm 80 mins Beinecke Classroom
1. Cataloguing non-standard MS materials: conventions and challenges
2. Practical work in pairs
Do: Develop the text of your part of the MS catalogue entry for MSS 410 & Osborn a14
60 mins Lunch, LC 319 -
1.30-3.00pm 90 mins LC 319
1. Introduction to text encoding and markup language
2. Introduction to the TEI
Think: What is ‘text’? Why encode?
15 mins Break -
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Although the materials used to make rolls and codices are the same, the ways in which they are used are very different. In examining the structure of a roll, questions arise that are not relevant to a codex.
For example, are membranes attached to one another using glue, thread, or parch-ment? Are new membranes attached over or under the preceding membrane? Does
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text run horizontally or vertically? In double-sided rolls, does text run in the same direction on both sides?
Although terminology for the study of cod-ices is well-developed, terminology for rolls is still developing: indeed, scholars working in different disciplines and on dif-ferent historical periods do not even agree on the difference between ‘roll’ and ‘scroll.’
The Codicology of Roll and Codex: Different Questions? BEINECKE MS 410 (DETAIL)
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3.15-4.30pm 75 mins LC 319
1. How to use oXygen 2. TEI structure and its common elements
Do: Practice using oXygen and TEI protocols
Evening: self-directed
Editorial decisions: an exercise in digital thinking
Do:
Write a short piece of xml code Practice using oXygen and TEI protocols
Day 2 – All Day: LC 319
10.00-11.00am
60 mins LC 319
The TEI: meeting the challenges of non-standard text
Think: How can we adapt hierarchies to represent our materials?
10 mins Break
11.10am-12.30pm 80 mins LC 319
Lecture on Digital Tools
Lecture by Catherine DeRose
Think: How should image and text be digitally linked? Who is the edition being created for?
60 mins Lunch, LC 319
1.30-3.00pm
75 mins LC 319
TEI metadata and how to use it: <teiHeader> and <msDesc>
Do: Mark up your catalogue data according to TEI protocols Post: Your completed markup
15 mins Break
3.15-4.30pm 75 mins LC 319
Guided Practical Session: Transcribe and mark up your MSS
Do: Begin to transcribe your sections of MSS 410 and Osborn a14, and mark them up using TEI
The English Manuscript Roll, 1200-1600: A Collaborative Digitization Project
This workshop represents a major facet of a collaboration between gradaute students at Yale University, the University of Toronto and the University of Connecticut. The project aims to to build a network of graduate students working with medieval manuscript rolls and/or digital humanities, to train graduate students in collaborative digital textual editing through hands-on group projects involving editing and editorial decision-making and TEI encoding, and to create online digital editions of five manuscript rolls.
The project’s webpage can be found at digitalrollsandfragments.com. We welcome inquiries from potential collaborators.
Project Team:
Anya Adair, Yale University – [email protected]
Katherine Hindley, Yale University – [email protected]
Micah Goodrich, University of Connecticut – [email protected]
Jessica Henderson, University of Toronto – [email protected]
Acknowledgements
The organizers of the workshop offer their particular thanks to the following people and organizations, for their assistance and advice:
Raymond Clemens, Curator, Early Books and Manuscripts Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
Carol Chiodo, Postdoctoral Associate, Yale Digital Humanities Lab
Trip Kirkpatrick, Yale Instructional Technology Group, Center for Teaching and Learning
Peter Leonard, Director, Yale Digital Humanities Lab
The Beinecke Library Digital Services Unit
Our supporters
Our grateful thanks go to the following institutions and organizations for their financial support:
The MAA/GSC Grant for Innovation in Community Building and Professionalization
Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
Whitney Humanities Center Working Group in Digital Manuscript Studies
Yale Digital Humanities Lab
Workshop Syllabus Spring 2016
YALE GARGOYLES WITH ROLL
PHOTO: MICHAEL MARSLAND